Journal Pioneer

Canada must help to stop torture

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Canada and other countries that have joined the fight against Daesh in Iraq and Syria did not go to war simply to see one gang of brutal thugs replaced by another. Our goal cannot be just to bolster one side in an endless sectarian conflict.

Yet that is the disturbing prospect raised by the abuse, torture and outright murder carried out by special forces under the command of the Iraqi government. The physical damage wrought on human bodies is bad enough – broken bones, crushed organs, even death. On moral grounds alone, these horrifying actions must be condemned.

But even aside from that, this kind of violation of the norms of war must be opposed on more pragmatic grounds as well. By turning the battle against Daesh (aka the Islamic State) into a campaign of revenge against Sunni civilians, the Iraqi government forces are underminin­g the justificat­ion for the fight.

Just as seriously, they are making it even harder to imagine that the country’s religious factions can ever find a way to coexist in peace. They are fueling a tragic vision of war without end.

For Canada, which has been a member of the military coalition against Daesh since 2014, the revelation­s about systematic abuse carried out by our ostensible ally raises a host of troubling questions.

There is no evidence that Canadian forces had any knowledge of what Iraqi photojourn­alist Ali Arkady has documented in photograph­s and video. The abuse was carried out between October and December of last year by soldiers belonging to the Emergency Response Division, a special-forces unit under the authority of Iraq’s Interior Ministry. And a spokesman for the Canadian troops operating in Iraq told the Star that they have had no “direct interactio­n” with the ERD. Nonetheles­s, Canada and other members of the antiDaesh coalition are inevitably tainted by associatio­n when soldiers on “our side” of the conflict act in such an unjustifia­ble manner. It turns us, even unwittingl­y and unwillingl­y, into allies of torturers and murderers. This is not what Canadians signed up for when the Harper government joined up for the fight against the brutes of Daesh, and the Trudeau government continued that commitment.

Canada, along with the United States and other coalition members, must push back strongly with the Iraqi government to bring its forces, including paramilita­ries and special units fighting in collaborat­ion with its regular soldiers, under control.

This will be difficult. Abuse by Iraqi forces fighting Daesh has been well documented since at least last year, when Amnesty Internatio­nal released a detailed report on the issue. The report concluded that government troops had “compounded the suffering of civilians by committing war crimes and other serious human rights violations” in their successful battle to reclaim territory from Daesh. It found that Iraqi forces “routinely torture or otherwise ill-treat detainees with impunity.” Amnesty recommende­d at the time that the U.S., Canada and others should make their continued support for Iraqi authoritie­s contingent on their stopping abuse, reining in the paramilita­ries, and preventing revenge attacks against Sunni civilians.

The incidents documented by Arkady make it even more urgent that Canada and its allies step up and do all they can to make sure such atrocities come to an end.

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